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A Book of New Zealand Verse 1923-45 by Allen Curnow (editor)
$45.00 NZD
Category: NZ Poetry
Secondhand. Chosen by Allen Curnow and published by the Caxton Press, canonised sixteen poets, whose work distinguished them from a horde of ‘trivial if sincere’ versifiers.
A Small Room with Large Windows by Allen Curnow
$47.50 NZD
Category: NZ Poetry
Secondhand. A small book about what a New Zealand poet had to say about kiwi's own place in the world.
Early Days Yet by Curnow, Allen
$21.50 NZD
Category: NZ Literature | Reading Level: very good
Brings together the 12 poems that Curnow has written since 1989, along with all published work since 1970 and a selection from the three previous decades. Childhood memories predominate in the new poems, but contemporary concerns are present throughout.
Recent Poems: Allen Curnow, A.R.D. Fairburn, Denis Glover, R.A.K. Mason by Allen Curnow, A.R.D Fairburn, Denis Glover, R.A.K. Mason
$75.00 NZD
Category: NZ Poetry
Secondhand.
Sailing or Drowning by Allen Curnow
$80.00 NZD
Category: NZ Poetry
Secondhand. A rare collection of poems by New Zealand poet, Allen Curnow.
The Axe: a verse tragedy by Allen Curnow
$65.00 NZD
Category: NZ Poetry
Secondhand. A rare collection of Allen Curnow. Drama in verse. Set in Mangaia, Cook Islands.
The Loop in Lone Kauri Road by Allen Curnow
$13.50 NZD
Category: NZ Literature
This is a new collection by the most distinguished New Zealand poet alive today, a man whom The Observer has hailed as "one of the most interesting poets writing in English."
Valley of Decision by Allen Curnow
$575.00 NZD
Category: NZ Poetry
Secondhand. First edition of Allen Curnow's first published poetry collection. Alexander Turnbull Library Rare Book copy. Series Phoenix Miscellany:1.
Whim Wham's New Zealand: The Best of Whim Wham 1937-1988 by Allen Curnow
$23.50 NZD
Category: NZ Literature | Reading Level: very good
Whim Wham was the pen-name of the major New Zealand poet Allen Curnow. His highly entertaining verses, commencing in the Christchurch Press in 1937 and in the New Zealand Herald from 1951, voiced the awkward questions so many New Zealanders wanted to ask. Whim Wham became a Saturday institution and requ ...Show more
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